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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Birds Illustrated by Color Photograph
+[March 1897], by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Birds Illustrated by Color Photograph [March 1897]
+ A Monthly Serial designed to Promote Knowledge of Bird-Life
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 26, 2009 [EBook #30103]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIRDS ILLUSTRATED [MARCH 1897] ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chris Curnow, Joseph Cooper and Anne Storer,
+some images courtesy of The Internet Archive and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: Title added.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ BIRDS ILLUSTRATED BY COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY
+
+ Vol. One MARCH, 1897 No. 3
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ FROM: THE PRESIDENT OF THE NATIONAL TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION.
+
+ _STATE OF NEW YORK_
+ _Department of Public Instruction_
+ _SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE_
+
+ _Albany_ December 26, 1896.
+
+ [Illustration: (seal)]
+ _Stenographic Letter_
+ Dictated by __________
+
+
+ W. E. Watt, President &c.,
+ Fisher Building,
+ 277 Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill.
+
+ My dear Sir:
+
+ Please accept my thanks for a copy of the first publication of "Birds."
+ Please enter my name as a regular subscriber. It is one of the most
+ beautiful and interesting publications yet attempted in this direction.
+ It has other attractions in addition to its beauty, and it must win its
+ way to popular favor.
+
+ Wishing the handsome little magazine abundant prosperity,
+ I remain
+
+ Yours very respectfully,
+ [signature]
+ State Superintendent.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
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+
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+ ARE
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+
+
+ Please mention "BIRDS" when you write to advertisers.
+
+
+
+
+ +----------------------------+
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+ +----------------------------+
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+ Awarded at Columbian World's Exposition, 1893
+
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+ to the German Government
+
+ #A. REED & SONS#
+ No. 5 Adams Street ... CHICAGO
+
+ Illustrated Catalogues ...
+ containing full explanation Mailed Free.
+
+ Please mention "BIRDS" when you write to advertisers.
+
+
+
+
+ #Every Teacher#
+
+ finds daily in her work
+ some new and perplexing
+ problem to solve.
+
+ With
+
+ The Teacher's
+ Practical Library
+
+ at hand for consultation the
+ answer may always be found.
+
+ It will cost you nothing
+
+ to have this library placed
+ upon your table for inspection.
+
+ Send postal-card for particulars,
+ mentioning this paper.
+
+ #AGENTS WANTED#
+
+ #D. APPLETON & CO., Publishers#
+ NEW YORK--CHICAGO.
+ CHICAGO OFFICE--243 Wabash Ave.
+
+
+
+
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+
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+ Mathematics, Shorthand, Typewriting, English, Penmanship, Bookkeeping,
+ Business, Telegraphy, Plumbing.# Best teachers. Thorough individual
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+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ If you want to know, read
+ #"SPIRITS OF '76,"#
+
+ By FREDERICK UPHAM ADAMS,
+ in last number of
+
+ #New Occasions#
+
+ A magazine of Reform; 96 pages; $1.00
+ a year; 10 cents a copy. No free samples,
+ but to any one sending us 6 2-cent
+ stamps we will mail a sample copy with
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+
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+ Send for Agents Prices.
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+ 84 Adams Street, CHICAGO, U.S.A.
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+ Maps, Charts, Apparatus, etc., etc.
+
+ #The Jones Model of the Earth# shows the
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+ inches diameter. Used by the Royal Geographical
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+
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+ Bank Furniture.
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+
+ Please mention "BIRDS" when you write to Advertisers.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE BOY BLUE.
+
+
+Boys and girls, don't you think that is a pretty name? I came from the
+warm south, where I went last winter, to tell you that Springtime is
+nearly here.
+
+When I sing, the buds and flowers and grass all begin to whisper to one
+another, "Springtime is coming for we heard the Bluebird say so," and
+then they peep out to see the warm sunshine. I perch beside them and
+tell them of my long journey from the south and how I knew just when
+to tell them to come out of their warm winter cradles. I am of the same
+blue color as the violet that shows her pretty face when I sing, "Summer
+is coming, and Springtime is here."
+
+I do not like the cities for they are black and noisy and full of those
+troublesome birds called English Sparrows. I take my pretty mate and
+out in the beautiful country we find a home. We build a nest of twigs,
+grass and hair, in a box that the farmer puts up for us near his barn.
+
+Sometimes we build in a hole in some old tree and soon there are tiny
+eggs in the nest. I sing to my mate and to the good people who own
+the barn. I heard the farmer say one day, "Isn't it nice to hear the
+Bluebird sing? He must be very happy." And I am, too, for by this time
+there are four or five little ones in the nest.
+
+Little Bluebirds are like little boys--they are always hungry. We work
+hard to find enough for them to eat. We feed them nice fat worms and
+bugs, and when their little wings are strong enough, we teach them how
+to fly. Soon they are large enough to hunt their own food, and can take
+care of themselves.
+
+The summer passes, and when we feel the breath of winter we go south
+again, for we do not like the cold.
+
+ * * *
+
+THE BLUE BIRD.
+
+ I know the song that the Bluebird is singing
+ Out in the apple tree, where he is swinging.
+ Brave little fellow! the skies may be dreary,
+ Nothing cares he while his heart is so cheery.
+ Hark! how the music leaps out from his throat,
+ Hark! was there ever so merry a note?
+
+ Listen a while, and you'll hear what he's saying,
+ Up in the apple tree swinging and swaying.
+ "Dear little blossoms down under the snow,
+ You must be weary of winter, I know;
+ Hark! while I sing you a message of cheer,
+ Summer is coming, and springtime is here!"
+
+ "Dear little snow-drop! I pray you arise;
+ Bright yellow crocus! come open your eyes;
+ Sweet little violets, hid from the cold,
+ Put on our mantles of purple and gold;
+ Daffodils! daffodils! say, do you hear,
+ Summer is coming! and springtime is here!"
+
+[Illustration: BLUE BIRD.]
+
+
+
+
+THE BLUE BIRD.
+
+
+ Winged lute that we call a blue bird,
+ You blend in a silver strain
+ The sound of the laughing waters,
+ The patter of spring's sweet rain,
+ The voice of the wind, the sunshine,
+ And fragrance of blossoming things,
+ Ah! you are a poem of April
+ That God endowed with wings. E. E. R.
+
+ * * *
+
+Like a bit of sky this little harbinger of spring appears, as we see
+him and his mate househunting in early March. Oftentimes he makes his
+appearance as early as the middle of February, when his attractive note
+is heard long before he himself is seen. He is one of the last to leave
+us, and although the month of November is usually chosen by him as the
+fitting time for departure to a milder clime, his plaintive note is
+quite commonly heard on pleasant days throughout the winter season,
+and a few of the braver and hardier ones never entirely desert us. The
+Robin and the Blue Bird are tenderly associated in the memories of most
+persons whose childhood was passed on a farm or in the country village.
+Before the advent of the English Sparrow, the Blue Bird was sure to
+be the first to occupy and the last to defend the little box prepared
+for his return, appearing in his blue jacket somewhat in advance of
+the plainly habited female, who on her arrival quite often found a
+habitation selected and ready for her acceptance, should he find favor
+in her sight. And then he becomes a most devoted husband and father,
+sitting by the nest and warbling with earnest affection his exquisite
+tune, and occasionally flying away in search of food for his mate and
+nestlings.
+
+The Blue Bird rears two broods in the season, and, should the weather
+be mild, even three. His nest contains three eggs.
+
+In the spring and summer when he is happy and gay, his song is
+extremely soft and agreeable, while it grows very mournful and
+plaintive as cold weather approaches. He is mild of temper, and a
+peaceable and harmless neighbor, setting a fine example of amiability
+to his feathered friends. In the early spring, however, he wages war
+against robins, wrens, swallows, and other birds whose habitations are
+of a kind to take his fancy. A celebrated naturalist says: "This bird
+seems incapable of uttering a harsh note, or of doing a spiteful,
+ill-tempered thing."
+
+Nearly everybody has his anecdote to tell of the Blue Bird's courage,
+but the author of "Wake Robin" tells his exquisitely thus: "A few years
+ago I put up a little bird house in the back end of my garden for the
+accommodation of the wrens, and every season a pair have taken up their
+abode there. One spring a pair of Blue Birds looked into the tenement,
+and lingered about several days, leading me to hope that they would
+conclude to occupy it. But they finally went away. Late in the season
+the wrens appeared, and after a little coquetting, were regularly
+installed in their old quarters, and were as happy as only wrens can
+be. But before their honeymoon was over, the Blue Birds returned. I
+knew something was wrong before I was up in the morning. Instead of that
+voluble and gushing song outside the window, I heard the wrens scolding
+and crying out at a fearful rate, and on going out saw the Blue Birds in
+possession of the box. The poor wrens were in despair and were forced to
+look for other quarters."
+
+
+
+
+THE SWALLOW.
+
+
+ "Come, summer visitant, attach
+ To my reedroof thy nest of clay,
+ And let my ear thy music catch,
+ Low twitting underneath the thatch,
+ At the gray dawn of day."
+
+Sure harbingers of spring are the Swallows. They are very common birds,
+and frequent, as a rule, the cultivated lands in the neighborhood of
+water, showing a decided preference for the habitations of man. "How
+gracefully the swallows fly! See them coursing over the daisy-bespangled
+grass fields; now they skim just over the blades of grass, and then with
+a rapid stroke of their long wings mount into the air and come hovering
+above your head, displaying their rich white and chestnut plumage to
+perfection. Now they chase each other for very joyfulness, uttering
+their sharp twittering notes; then they hover with expanded wings
+like miniature Kestrels, or dart downwards with the velocity of
+the sparrowhawk; anon they flit rapidly over the neighboring pool,
+occasionally dipping themselves in its calm and placid waters, and
+leaving a long train of rings marking their varied course. How easily
+they turn, or glide over the surrounding hedges, never resting, never
+weary, and defying the eye to trace them in the infinite turnings and
+twistings of their rapid shooting flight. You frequently see them glide
+rapidly near the ground, and then with a sidelong motion mount aloft, to
+dart downwards like an animated meteor, their plumage glowing in the
+light with metallic splendor, and the row of white spots on the tail
+contrasting beautifully with the darker plumage."
+
+The Swallow is considered a life-paired species, and returns to its
+nesting site of the previous season, building a new nest close to the
+old one. His nest is found in barns and outhouses, upon the beams of
+wood which support the roof, or in any place which assures protection to
+the young birds. It is cup-shaped and artfully moulded of bits of mud.
+Grass and feathers are used for the lining. "The nest completed, five or
+six eggs are deposited. They are of a pure white color, with deep rich
+brown blotches and spots, notably at the larger end, round which they
+often form a zone or belt." The sitting bird is fed by her mate.
+
+The young Swallow is distinguished from the mature birds by the absence
+of the elongated tail feathers, which are a mark of maturity alone. His
+food is composed entirely of insects. Swallows are on the wing fully
+sixteen hours, and the greater part of the time making terrible havoc
+amongst the millions of insects which infest the air. It is said that
+when the Swallow is seen flying high in the heavens, it is a never
+failing indication of fine weather.
+
+A pair of Swallows on arriving at their nesting place of the preceding
+Summer found their nest occupied by a Sparrow, who kept the poor birds
+at a distance by pecking at them with his strong beak whenever they
+attempted to dislodge him. Wearied and hopeless of regaining possession
+of their property, they at last hit upon a plan which effectually
+punished the intruder. One morning they appeared with a few more
+Swallows--their mouths filled with a supply of tempered clay--and, by
+their joint efforts in a short time actually plastered up the entrance
+to the hole, thus barring the Sparrow from the home which he had stolen
+from the Swallows.
+
+[Illustration: BARN SWALLOW.]
+
+
+
+
+THE BROWN THRUSH.
+
+
+ "However the world goes ill,
+ The Thrushes still sing in it."
+
+The Mocking-bird of the North, as the Brown Thrush has been called,
+arrives in the Eastern and Middle States about the 10th of May, at which
+season he may be seen, perched on the highest twig of a hedge, or on the
+topmost branch of a tree, singing his loud and welcome song, that may be
+heard a distance of half a mile. The favorite haunt of the Brown Thrush,
+however, is amongst the bright and glossy foliage of the evergreens.
+"There they delight to hide, although not so shy and retiring as the
+Blackbird; there they build their nests in greatest numbers, amongst the
+perennial foliage, and there they draw at nightfall to repose in warmth
+and safety." The Brown Thrasher sings chiefly just after sunrise and
+before sunset, but may be heard singing at intervals during the day. His
+food consists of wild fruits, such as blackberries and raspberries,
+snails, worms, slugs and grubs. He also obtains much of his food
+amongst the withered leaves and marshy places of the woods and
+shrubberies which he frequents. Few birds possess a more varied melody.
+His notes are almost endless in variety, each note seemingly uttered at
+the caprice of the bird, without any perceptible approach to order.
+
+The site of the Thrush's nest is a varied one, in the hedgerows, under a
+fallen tree or fence-rail; far up in the branches of stately trees, or
+amongst the ivy growing up their trunks. The nest is composed of the
+small dead twigs of trees, lined with the fine fibers of roots. From
+three to five eggs are deposited, and are hatched in about twelve days.
+They have a greenish background, thickly spotted with light brown,
+giving the whole egg a brownish appearance.
+
+The Brown Thrush leaves the Eastern and Middle States, on his migration
+South, late in September, remaining until the following May.
+
+ * * *
+
+THE THRUSH'S NEST.
+
+ "Within a thick and spreading hawthorn bush
+ That overhung a molehill, large and round,
+ I heard from morn to morn a merry thrush
+ Sing hymns of rapture while I drank the sound
+ With joy--and oft an unintruding guest,
+ I watched her secret toils from day to day;
+ How true she warped the moss to form her nest,
+ And modeled it within with wood and clay.
+ And by and by, with heath-bells gilt with dew,
+ There lay her shining eggs as bright as flowers,
+ Ink-spotted over, shells of green and blue:
+ And there I witnessed, in the summer hours,
+ A brood of nature's minstrels chirp and fly,
+ Glad as the sunshine and the laughing sky."
+
+
+
+
+THE BROWN THRUSH.
+
+
+Dear Readers:
+
+My cousin Robin Redbreast told me that he wrote you a letter last month
+and sent it with his picture. How did you like it? He is a pretty
+bird--Cousin Robin--and everybody likes him. But I must tell you
+something of myself.
+
+Folks call me by different names--some of them nicknames, too.
+
+The cutest one of all is Brown Thrasher. I wonder if you know why they
+call me Thrasher. If you don't, ask some one. It is really funny.
+
+Some people think Cousin Robin is the sweetest singer of our family, but
+a great many like my song just as well.
+
+Early in the morning I sing among the bushes, but later in the day you
+will always find me in the very top of a tree and it is then I sing my
+best.
+
+Do you know what I say in my song? Well, if I am near a farmer while he
+is planting, I say: "Drop it, drop it--cover it up, cover it up--pull it
+up, pull it up, pull it up."
+
+One thing I very seldom do and that is, sing when near my nest. Maybe
+you can tell why. I'm not very far from my nest now. I just came down to
+the stream to get a drink and am watching that boy on the other side of
+the stream. Do you see him?
+
+One dear lady who loves birds has said some very nice things about me in
+a book called "Bird Ways." Another lady has written a beautiful poem
+about my singing. Ask your mamma or teacher the names of these ladies.
+Here is the poem:
+
+ There's a merry brown thrush sitting up in a tree.
+ He is singing to me! He is singing to me!
+ And what does he say--little girl, little boy?
+ "Oh, the world's running over with joy!
+ Hush! Look! In my tree,
+ I am as happy as happy can be."
+
+ And the brown thrush keeps singing, "A nest, do you see,
+ And five eggs, hid by me in the big cherry tree?
+ Don't meddle, don't touch--little girl, little boy--
+ Or the world will lose some of its joy!
+ Now I am glad! now I am free!
+ And I always shall be,
+ If you never bring sorrow to me."
+
+ So the merry brown thrush sings away in the tree
+ To you and to me--to you and to me;
+ And he sings all the day--little girl, little boy--
+ "Oh, the world's running over with joy!
+ But long it won't be,
+ Don't you know? don't you see?
+ Unless we're good as good can be."
+
+[Illustration: BROWN THRASHER.]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: JAPAN PHEASANT.]
+
+THE JAPAN PHEASANT.
+
+
+Originally the Pheasant was an inhabitant of Asia Minor but has been
+by degrees introduced into many countries, where its beauty of form,
+plumage, and the delicacy of its flesh made it a welcome visitor. The
+Japan Pheasant is a very beautiful species, about which little is known
+in its wild state, but in captivity it is pugnacious. It requires much
+shelter and plenty of food, and the breed is to some degree artificially
+kept up by the hatching of eggs under domestic hens and feeding them in
+the coop like ordinary chickens, until they are old and strong enough to
+get their own living.
+
+The food of this bird is extremely varied. When young it is generally
+fed on ants' eggs, maggots, grits, and similar food, but when it is full
+grown it is possessed of an accommodating appetite and will eat many
+kinds of seeds, roots, and leaves. It will also eat beans, peas, acorns,
+berries, and has even been known to eat the ivy leaf, as well as the
+berry.
+
+This Pheasant loves the ground, runs with great speed, and always
+prefers to trust to its legs rather than to its wings. It is crafty, and
+when alarmed it slips quickly out of sight behind a bush or through a
+hedge, and then runs away with astonishing rapidity, always remaining
+under cover until it reaches some spot where it deems itself safe. The
+male is not domestic, passing an independent life during a part of the
+year and associating with others of its own sex during the rest of the
+season.
+
+The nest is very rude, being merely a heap of leaves and grass on the
+ground, with a very slight depression. The eggs are numerous, about
+eleven or twelve, and olive brown in color. In total length, though they
+vary considerably, the full grown male is about three feet. The female
+is smaller in size than her mate, and her length a foot less.
+
+The Japan Pheasant is not a particularly interesting bird aside from his
+beauty, which is indeed brilliant, there being few of the species more
+attractive.
+
+
+
+
+THE FLICKER.
+
+
+A great variety of names does this bird possess. It is commonly known
+as the Golden Winged Woodpecker, Yellow-shafted Flicker, Yellow Hammer,
+and less often as High-hole or High-holer, Wake-up, etc. In suitable
+localities throughout the United States and the southern parts of
+Canada, the Flicker is a very common bird, and few species are more
+generally known. "It is one of the most sociable of our Woodpeckers,
+and is apparently always on good terms with its neighbors. It usually
+arrives in April, occasionally even in March, the males preceding the
+females a few days, and as soon as the latter appear one can hear their
+voices in all directions."
+
+The Flicker is an ardent wooer. It is an exceedingly interesting and
+amusing sight to see a couple of males paying their addresses to a coy
+and coquettish female; the apparent shyness of the suitors as they sidle
+up to her and as quickly retreat again, the shy glances given as one
+peeps from behind a limb watching the other--playing bo-peep--seem
+very human, and "I have seen," says an observer, "few more amusing
+performances than the courtship of a pair of these birds." The defeated
+suitor takes his rejection quite philosophically, and retreats in a
+dignified manner, probably to make other trials elsewhere. Few birds
+deserve our good will more than the Flicker. He is exceedingly useful,
+destroying multitudes of grubs, larvae, and worms. He loves berries and
+fruit but the damage he does to cultivated fruit is very trifling.
+
+The Flicker begins to build its nest about two weeks after the bird
+arrives from the south. It prefers open country, interspersed with
+groves and orchards, to nest in. Any old stump, or partly decayed limb
+of a tree, along the banks of a creek, beside a country road, or in
+an old orchard, will answer the purpose. Soft wood trees seem to be
+preferred, however. In the prairie states it occasionally selects
+strange nesting sites. It has been known to chisel through the weather
+boarding of a dwelling house, barns, and other buildings, and to nest
+in the hollow space between this and the cross beams; its nests have
+also been found in gate posts, in church towers, and in burrows of
+Kingfishers and bank swallows, in perpendicular banks of streams. One
+of the most peculiar sites of his selection is described by William A.
+Bryant as follows: "On a small hill, a quarter of a mile distant from
+any home, stood a hay stack which had been placed there two years
+previously. The owner, during the winter of 1889-90, had cut the stack
+through the middle and hauled away one portion, leaving the other
+standing, with the end smoothly trimmed. The following spring I noticed
+a pair of flickers about the stack showing signs of wanting to make it
+a fixed habitation. One morning a few days later I was amused at the
+efforts of one of the pair. It was clinging to the perpendicular end of
+the stack and throwing out clipped hay at a rate to defy competition.
+This work continued for a week, and in that time the pair had excavated
+a cavity twenty inches in depth. They remained in the vicinity until
+autumn. During the winter the remainder of the stack was removed. They
+returned the following spring, and, after a brief sojourn, departed for
+parts unknown."
+
+From five to nine eggs are generally laid. They are glossy white in
+color, and when fresh appear as if enameled.
+
+The young are able to leave the nest in about sixteen days; they crawl
+about on the limbs of the tree for a couple of days before they venture
+to fly, and return to the nest at night.
+
+[Illustration: FLICKER.]
+
+
+
+
+THE BOBOLINK.
+
+
+ "When Nature had made all her birds,
+ And had no cares to think on,
+ She gave a rippling laugh,
+ And out there flew a Bobolinkon."
+
+No American ornithologist omits mention of the Bobolink, and naturalists
+generally have described him under one of the many names by which he is
+known. In some States he is called the Rice Bird, in others Reed Bird,
+the Rice or Reed Bunting, while his more familiar title, throughout the
+greater part of America, is Bobolink, or Bobolinkum. In Jamaica, where
+he gets very fat during his winter stay, he is called the Butter Bird.
+His title of Rice Troopial is earned by the depredations which he
+annually makes upon the rice crops, though his food "is by no means
+restricted to that seed, but consists in a large degree of insects,
+grubs, and various wild grasses." A migratory bird, residing during the
+winter in the southern parts of America, he returns in vast multitudes
+northward in the early Spring. According to Wilson, their course of
+migration is as follows: "In April, or very early in May, the Rice
+Buntings, male and female, arrive within the southern boundaries of
+the United States, and are seen around the town of Savannah, Georgia,
+sometimes in separate parties of males and females, but more generally
+promiscuously. They remain there but a short time, and about the middle
+of May make their appearance in the lower part of Pennsylvania. While
+here the males are extremely gay and full of song, frequenting meadows,
+newly plowed fields, sides of creeks, rivers, and watery places, feeding
+on May flies and caterpillars, of which they destroy great quantities.
+In their passage, however, through Virginia at this season, they do
+great damage to the early wheat and barley while in their milky state.
+About the 20th of May they disappear on their way to the North. Nearly
+at the same time they arrive in the State of New York, spread over the
+whole of the New England States, as far as the river St. Lawrence, and
+from Lake Ontario to the sea. In all of these places they remain during
+the Summer, building their nests and rearing their young."
+
+The Bobolink's song is a peculiar one, varying greatly with the
+occasion. As he flys southward, his cry is a kind of clinking note; but
+the love song addressed to his mate is voluble and fervent. It has been
+said that if you should strike the keys of a pianoforte haphazard, the
+higher and the lower singly very quickly, you might have some idea of
+the Bobolink's notes. In the month of June he gradually changes his
+pretty, attractive dress and puts on one very like the females, which is
+of a plain rusty brown, and is not reassumed until the next season of
+nesting. The two parent birds in the plate represent the change from the
+dark plumage in which the bird is commonly known in the North as the
+Bobolink, to the dress of yellowish brown by which it is known
+throughout the South as the Rice or Reed Bird.
+
+His nest, small and a plain one, too, is built on the ground by his
+industrious little wife. The inside is warmly lined with soft fibers of
+whatever may be nearest at hand. Five pretty white eggs, spotted all
+over with brown are laid, and as soon
+
+ "As the little ones chip the shell
+ And five wide mouths are ready for food,
+ 'Robert of Lincoln' bestirs him well,
+ Gathering seeds for this hungry brood."
+
+
+
+
+BOBOLINK.
+
+
+Other birds may like to travel alone, but when jolly Mr. Bobolink and
+his quiet little wife come from the South, where they have spent the
+winter, they come with a large party of friends. When South, they eat so
+much rice that the people call them Rice Birds. When they come North,
+they enjoy eating wheat, barley, oats and insects.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Bobolink build their simple little nest of grasses in some
+field. It is hard to find on the ground, for it looks just like dry
+grass. Mrs. Bobolink wears a dull dress, so she cannot be seen when she
+is sitting on the precious eggs. She does not sing a note while caring
+for the eggs. Why do you think that is?
+
+Mr. Bob-Linkum does not wear a sober dress, as you can see by his
+picture. He does not need to be hidden. He is just as jolly as he
+looks. Shall I tell you how he amuses his mate while she is sitting?
+He springs from the dew-wet grass with a sound like peals of merry
+laughter. He frolics from reed to post, singing as if his little heart
+would burst with joy.
+
+Don't you think Mr. and Mrs. Bobolink look happy in the picture? They
+have raised their family of five. Four of their children have gone to
+look for food; one of them--he must surely be the baby--would rather
+stay with his mamma and papa. Which one does he look like?
+
+Many birds are quiet at noon and in the afternoon. A flock of Bobolinks
+can be heard singing almost all day long. The song is full of high notes
+and low, soft notes and loud, all sung rapidly. It is as gay and bright
+as the birds themselves, who flit about playfully as they sing. You will
+feel like laughing as merrily as they sing when you hear it some day.
+
+[Illustration: BOBOLINKS.]
+
+
+
+
+THE BLUE BIRD.
+
+
+ "Drifting down the first warm wind
+ That thrills the earliest days of spring,
+ The Bluebird seeks our maple groves
+ And charms them into tasselling."
+
+ "He sings, and his is Nature's voice--
+ A gush of melody sincere
+ From that great fount of harmony
+ Which thaws and runs when Spring is here."
+
+ "Short is his song, but strangely sweet
+ To ears aweary of the low
+ Dull tramps of Winter's sullen feet,
+ Sandalled in ice and muffled in snow."
+
+ * * *
+
+ "Think, every morning, when the sun peeps through
+ The dim, leaf-latticed windows of the grove,
+ How jubilant the happy birds renew
+ Their old, melodious madrigals of love!
+ And when you think of this, remember, too,
+ 'Tis always morning somewhere, and above
+ The awakening continents, from shore to shore,
+ Somewhere the birds are singing evermore.
+
+ "Think of your woods and orchards without birds!
+ Of empty nests that cling to boughs and beams
+ As in an idiot's brain remembered words
+ Hang empty 'mid the cobwebs of his dreams!
+ Will bleat of flocks or bellowing of herds
+ Make up for the lost music, when your teams
+ Drag home the stingy harvest, and no more
+ The feathered gleaners follow to your door?"
+ FROM "THE BIRDS OF KILLINGSWORTH."
+
+
+
+
+THE CROW.
+
+
+Caw! Caw! Caw! little boys and girls. Caw! Caw! Caw! Just look at my
+coat of feathers. See how black and glossy it is. Do you wonder I am
+proud of it?
+
+Perhaps you think I look very solemn and wise, and not at all as if I
+cared to play games. I do, though; and one of the games I like best is
+hide-and-seek. I play it with the farmer in the spring. He hides, in the
+rich, brown earth, golden kernels of corn. Surely he does it because he
+knows I like it, for sometimes he puts up a stick all dressed like a man
+to show where the corn is hidden. Sometimes I push my bill down into the
+earth to find the corn, and at other times I wait until tiny green
+leaves begin to show above the ground, and then I get my breakfast
+without much trouble. I wonder if the farmer enjoys this game as much
+as I do. I help him, too, by eating worms and insects.
+
+During the spring and summer I live in my nest on the top of a very
+high tree. It is built of sticks and grasses and straw and string and
+anything else I can pick up. But in the fall, I and all my relations and
+friends live together in great roosts or rookeries. What good times we
+do have--hunting all day for food and talking all night. Wouldn't you
+like to be with us?
+
+The farmer who lives in the house over there went to the mill to-day
+with a load of corn.
+
+One of the ears dropped out of the wagon and it didn't take me long to
+find it. I have eaten all I can possibly hold and am wondering now what
+is the best thing to do. If you were in my place would you leave it here
+and not tell anybody and come back to-morrow and finish it? Or would you
+fly off and get Mrs. Crow and some of the children to come and finish
+it? I believe I'll fly and get them. Good-bye.
+
+Caw! Caw! Caw!
+
+[Illustration: COMMON CROW.]
+
+
+
+
+THE COMMON CROW.
+
+
+ "The crow doth sing as merry as the lark,
+ When neither is attended."
+
+Few birds have more interesting characteristics than the Common Crow,
+being, in many of his actions, very like the Raven, especially in his
+love for carrion. Like the Raven, he has been known to attack game,
+although his inferior size forces him to call to his assistance the aid
+of his fellows to cope with larger creatures. Rabbits and hares are
+frequently the prey of this bird which pounces on them as they steal
+abroad to feed. His food consists of reptiles, frogs, and lizards; he
+is a plunderer of other birds' nests. On the seashore he finds crabs,
+shrimps and inhabited shells, which he ingeniously cracks by flying with
+them to a great height and letting them fall upon a convenient rock.
+
+The crow is seen in single pairs or in little bands of four or five.
+In the autumn evenings, however, they assemble in considerable flocks
+before going to roost and make a wonderful chattering, as if comparing
+notes of the events of the day.
+
+The nest of the Crow is placed in some tree remote from habitations of
+other birds. Although large and very conspicuous at a distance, it is
+fixed upon one of the topmost branches quite out of reach of the hand of
+the adventurous urchin who longs to secure its contents. It is loosely
+made and saucer shaped. Sticks and softer substances are used to
+construct it, and it is lined with hair and fibrous roots. Very recently
+a thrifty and intelligent Crow built for itself a summer residence in an
+airy tree near Bombay, the material used being gold, silver, and steel
+spectacle frames, which the bird had stolen from an optician of that
+city. Eighty-four frames had been used for this purpose, and they were
+so ingeniously woven together that the nest was quite a work of art.
+The eggs are variable, or rather individual, in their markings, and
+even in their size. The Crow rarely uses the same nest twice, although
+he frequently repairs to the same locality from year to year. He is
+remarkable for his attachment to his mate and young, surpassing the
+Fawn and Turtle Dove in conjugal courtesy.
+
+The Somali Arabs bear a deadly hatred toward the Crow. The origin of
+their detestation is the superstition that during the flight of Mohammed
+from his enemies, he hid himself in a cave, where he was perceived by
+the Crow, at that time a bird of light plumage, who, when he saw the
+pursuers approaching the spot, perched above Mohammed's hiding place,
+and screamed, "Ghar! Ghar!" (cave! cave!) so as to indicate the place
+of concealment. His enemies, however, did not understand the bird, and
+passed on, and Mohammed, when he came out of the cave, clothed the Crow
+in perpetual black, and commanded him to cry "Ghar" as long as Crows
+should live.
+
+And he lives to a good old age. Instances are not rare where he has
+attained to half a century, without great loss of activity or failure of
+sight.
+
+At Red Bank, a few miles northeast of Cincinnati, on the Little Miami
+River, in the bottoms, large flocks of Crows congregate the year around.
+A few miles away, high upon Walnut Hills, is a Crow roost, and in the
+late afternoons the Crows, singly, in pairs, and in flocks, are seen on
+the wing, flying heavily, with full crops, on the way to the roost, from
+which they descend in the early morning, crying "Caw! Caw!" to the
+fields of the newly planted, growing, or matured corn, or corn stacks,
+as the season may provide.
+
+
+
+
+THE RETURN OF THE BIRDS.
+
+
+ "Everywhere the blue sky belongs to them and is their appointed
+ rest, and their native country, and their own natural home
+ which they enter unannounced as lords that are certainly
+ expected, and yet there is a silent joy at their arrival."
+
+The return of the birds to their real home in the North, where they
+build their nests and rear their young, is regarded by all genuine
+lovers of earth's messengers of gladness and gayety as one of the most
+interesting and poetical of annual occurrences. The naturalist, who
+notes the very day of each arrival, in order that he may verify former
+observation or add to his material gathered for a new work, does not
+necessarily anticipate with greater pleasure this event than do many
+whose lives are brightened by the coming of the friends of their youth,
+who alone of early companions do not change. First of all--and ever the
+same delightful warbler--the Bluebird, who, in 1895, did not appear at
+all in many localities, though here in considerable numbers last year,
+betrays himself. "Did he come down out of the heaven on that bright
+March morning when he told us so softly and plaintively that, if we
+pleased, spring had come?" Sometimes he is here a little earlier, and
+must keep his courage up until the cold snap is over and the snow is
+gone. Not long after the Bluebird, comes the Robin, sometimes in March,
+but in most of the northern states April is the month of his arrival.
+With his first utterance the spell of winter is broken, and the
+remembrance of it afar off. Then appears the Woodpecker in great
+variety, the Flicker usually arriving first. He is always somebody's old
+favorite, "announcing his arrival by a long, loud call, repeated from
+the dry branch of some tree, or a stake in the fence--a thoroughly
+melodious April sound."
+
+Few perhaps reflect upon the difficulties encountered by the birds
+themselves in their returning migrations. A voyager sometimes meets
+with many of our common birds far out at sea. Such wanderers, it is
+said, when suddenly overtaken by a fog, completely lose their sense of
+direction and become hopelessly lost. Humming birds, those delicately
+organized, glittering gems, are among the most common of the land
+species seen at sea.
+
+The present season has been quite favorable to the protection of birds.
+A very competent observer says that not all of the birds migrated this
+winter. He recently visited a farm less than an hour's ride from
+Chicago, where he found the old place, as he relates it, "chucked full
+of Robins, Blackbirds, and Woodpeckers," and others unknown to him.
+From this he inferred they would have been in Florida had indications
+predicted a severe winter. The trees of the south parks of Chicago,
+and those in suburban places, have had, darting through their branches
+during the months of December and January, nearly as many members of the
+Woodpecker tribe as were found there during the mating season in May
+last.
+
+Alas, that the Robin will visit us in diminished numbers in the
+approaching spring. He has not been so common for a year or two as
+he was formerly, for the reason that the Robins died by thousands of
+starvation, owing to the freezing of their food supply in Tennessee
+during the protracted cold weather in the winter of 1895. It is indeed
+sad that this good Samaritan among birds should be defenseless against
+the severity of Nature, the common mother of us all. Nevertheless the
+return of the birds, in myriads or in single pairs, will be welcomed
+more and more, year by year, as intelligent love and appreciation of
+them shall possess the popular mind.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: BLACK TERN.
+ Mother and Young with Eggs.]
+
+THE BLACK TERN.
+
+
+"The Tern," says Mr. F. M. Woodruff, of the Chicago Academy of Sciences,
+"is the only representative of the long-winged swimmers which commonly
+nests with us on our inland fresh water marshes, arriving early in May
+in its brooding plumage of sooty black. The color changes in the autumn
+to white, and a number of the adult birds may be found, in the latter
+part of July, dotted and streaked here and there with white. On the
+first of June, 1891, I found a large colony of Black Terns nesting on
+Hyde Lake, Cook County, Illinois. As I approached the marsh a few birds
+were seen flying high in the air, and, as I neared the nesting site, the
+flying birds gave notes of alarm, and presently the air was filled with
+the graceful forms of this beautiful little bird. They circled about me,
+darting down to within a few feet of my head, constantly uttering a
+harsh, screaming cry. As the eggs are laid upon the bare ground, which
+the brownish and blackish markings so closely resemble, I was at first
+unable to find the nests, and discovered that the only way to locate
+them was to stand quietly and watch the birds. When the Tern is passing
+over the nest it checks its flight, and poises for a moment on quivering
+wings. By keeping my eyes on this spot I found the nest with very little
+trouble. The complement of eggs, when the bird has not been disturbed,
+is usually three. These are laid in a saucer shaped structure of dead
+vegetation, which is scraped together, from the surface of the wet,
+boggy ground. The bird figured in the plate had placed its nest on the
+edge of an old muskrat house, and my attention was attracted to it by
+the fact that upon the edge of the rat house, where it had climbed to
+rest itself, was the body of a young dabchick, or piedbilled grebe,
+scarcely two and one-half inches long, and not twenty-four hours out of
+the egg, a beautiful little ball of blackish down, striped with brown
+and white. From the latter part of July to the middle of August large
+flocks of Black Terns may be seen on the shores of our larger lakes on
+their annual migration southward."
+
+The Rev. P. B. Peabody, in alluding to his observation of the nests
+of the Tern, says: "Amid this floating sea of aquatic nests I saw an
+unusual number of well constructed homes of the Tern. Among these was
+one that I count a perfect nest. It rested on the perfectly flat
+foundation of a small decayed rat house, which was about fourteen
+inches in diameter. The nest, in form, is a truncated cone (barring
+the cavity), was about eight inches high and ten inches in diameter.
+The hollow--quite shallow--was about seven inches across, being thus
+unusually large. The whole was built up of bits of rushes, carried to
+the spot, these being quite uniform in length--about four inches." After
+daily observation of the Tern, during which time he added much to his
+knowledge of the bird, he pertinently asks: "Who shall say how many
+traits and habits yet unknown may be discovered through patient watching
+of community-breeding birds, by men enjoying more of leisure for such
+delightful studies than often falls to the lot of most of us who have
+bread and butter to earn and a tiny part of the world's work to
+finish?"
+
+
+
+
+THE MEADOW LARK.
+
+
+ "Not an inch of his body is free from delight.
+ Can he keep himself still if he would? Oh, not he!
+ The music stirs in him like wind through a tree."
+
+The well known Meadow or Old Field Lark is a constant resident south
+of latitude 39, and many winter farther north in favorite localities.
+Its geographical range is eastern North America, Canada to south Nova
+Scotia, Quebec, and Ontario to eastern Manitoba; west to Minnesota,
+Iowa, Missouri, eastern Kansas, the Indian Territory, and Texas; south
+to Florida and the Gulf coast, in all of which localities, except in the
+extreme north, it usually rears two or three broods in a season. In the
+Northern States it is only a summer resident, arriving in April and
+remaining until the latter part of October and occasionally November.
+Excepting during the breeding season, small flocks may often be seen
+roving about in search of good feeding grounds. Major Bendire says
+this is especially true in the fall of the year. At this time several
+families unite, and as many as two dozen may occasionally be flushed in
+a field, over which they scatter, roaming about independently of each
+other. When one takes wing all the others in the vicinity follow. It
+is a shy bird in the East, while in the middle states it is quite the
+reverse. Its flight is rather laborious, at least in starting, and is
+continued by a series of rapid movements of the wings, alternating with
+short distances of sailing, and is rarely protracted. On alighting,
+which is accompanied with a twitching of its tail, it usually settles on
+some fence rail, post, boulder, weedstock, or on a hillock in a meadow
+from which it can get a good view of the surroundings, and but rarely
+on a limb of a tree. Its favorite resorts are meadows, fallow fields,
+pastures, and clearings, but in some sections, as in northern Florida,
+for instance, it also frequents the low, open pine woods and nests
+there.
+
+The song of the Meadow Lark is not much varied, but its clear, whistling
+notes, so frequently heard in the early spring, are melodious and
+pleasing to the ear. It is decidedly the farmers' friend, feeding, as
+it does, on noxious insects, caterpillars, moths, grasshoppers, spiders,
+worms and the like, and eating but little grain. The lark spends the
+greater part of its time on the ground, procuring all its food there.
+It is seldom found alone, and it is said remains paired for life.
+
+Nesting begins in the early part of May and lasts through June. Both
+sexes assist in building the nest, which is always placed on the ground,
+either in a natural depression, or in a little hollow scratched out by
+the birds, alongside a bunch of grass or weeds. The nest itself is lined
+with dry grass, stubble, and sometimes pine needles. Most nests are
+placed in level meadows. The eggs and young are frequently destroyed by
+vermin, for the meadow lark has many enemies. The eggs vary from three
+to seven, five being the most common, and both sexes assist in the
+hatching, which requires about fifteen or sixteen days. The young leave
+the nest before they are able to fly--hiding at the slightest sign of
+danger. The Meadow Lark does not migrate beyond the United States. It is
+a native bird, and is only accidental in England. The eggs are spotted,
+blotched, and speckled with shades of brown, purple and lavender. A
+curious incident is told of a Meadow Lark trying to alight on the top
+mast of a schooner several miles at sea. It was evidently very tired but
+would not venture near the deck.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: MEADOW LARK.]
+
+THE MEADOW LARK.
+
+
+I told the man who wanted my picture that he could take it if he would
+show my nest and eggs. Do you blame me for saying so? Don't you think it
+makes a better picture than if I stood alone?
+
+Mr. Lark is away getting me some breakfast, or he could be in the
+picture, too. After a few days I shall have some little baby birds, and
+then won't we be happy.
+
+Boys and girls who live in the country know us pretty well. When they
+drive the cows out to pasture, or when they go out to gather wild
+flowers, we sit on the fences by the roadside and make them glad with
+our merry song.
+
+Those of you who live in the city cannot see us unless you come out into
+the country.
+
+It isn't very often that we can find such a pretty place for a nest as
+we have here. Most of the time we build our nest under the grass and
+cover it over, and build a little tunnel leading to it. This year we
+made up our minds not to be afraid.
+
+The people living in the houses over there do not bother us at all and
+we are so happy.
+
+You never saw baby larks, did you? Well, they are queer little fellows,
+with hardly any feathers on them.
+
+Last summer we had five little birdies to feed, and it kept us busy from
+morning till night. This year we only expect three, and Mr. Lark says he
+will do all the work. He knows a field that is being plowed, where he
+can get nice, large worms.
+
+Hark! that is he singing. He will be surprised when he comes back and
+finds me off the nest. He is so afraid that I will let the eggs get
+cold, but I won't. There he comes, now.
+
+
+
+
+THE LONG-EARED OWL.
+
+
+The name of the Long-Eared Owl is derived from the great length of his
+"ears" or feather-tufts, which are placed upon the head, and erect
+themselves whenever the bird is interested or excited. It is the "black
+sheep" of the owl family, the majority of owls being genuine friends of
+the agriculturist, catching for his larder so many of the small animals
+that prey upon his crops. In America he is called the Great Horned
+Owl--in Europe the Golden Owl.
+
+Nesting time with the owl begins in February, and continues through
+March and April. The clown-like antics of both sexes of this bird while
+under the tender influence of the nesting season tend somewhat to impair
+their reputation for dignity and wise demeanor. They usually have a
+simple nest in a hollow tree, but which seems seldom to be built by the
+bird itself, as it prefers to take the deserted nest of some other bird,
+and to fit up the premises for its own use. They repair slightly from
+year to year the same nest. The eggs are white, and generally four or
+five in number. While the young are still in the nest, the parent birds
+display a singular diligence in collecting food for them.
+
+If you should happen to know of an owl's nest, stand near it some
+evening when the old birds are rearing their young. Keep quiet and
+motionless, and notice how frequently the old birds feed them. Every ten
+minutes or so the soft flap, flap of their wings will be heard, the male
+and female alternately, and you will obtain a brief glimpse of them
+through the gloom as they enter the nesting place. They remain inside
+but a short time, sharing the food equally amongst their brood, and
+then are off again to hunt for more. All night, were you to have the
+inclination to observe them, you would find they pass to and fro with
+food, only ceasing their labors at dawn. The young, as soon as they
+reach maturity, are abandoned by their parents; they quit the nest and
+seek out haunts elsewhere, while the old birds rear another, and not
+infrequently two more broods, during the remainder of the season.
+
+The habits of the Long-Eared Owl are nocturnal. He is seldom seen in the
+light of day, and is greatly disturbed if he chance to issue from his
+concealment while the sun is above the horizon. The facial disk is very
+conspicuous in this species. It is said that the use of this circle is
+to collect the rays of light, and throw them upon the eye. The flight
+of the owl is softened by means of especially shaped, recurved
+feather-tips, so that he may noiselessly steal upon his prey, and
+the ear is also so shaped as to gather sounds from below.
+
+The Long-Eared Owl is hardly tameable. The writer of this paragraph, when
+a boy, was the possessor, for more than a year, of a very fine specimen.
+We called him Judge. He was a monster, and of perfect plumage. Although
+he seemed to have some attachment to the children of the family who fed
+him, he would not permit himself to be handled by them or by any one in
+the slightest. Most of his time he spent in his cage, an immense affair,
+in which he was very comfortable. Occasionally he had a day in the barn
+with the rats and mice.
+
+The owl is of great usefulness to gardener, agriculturist, and landowner
+alike, for there is not another bird of prey which is so great a
+destroyer of the enemies of vegetation.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: GREAT HORNED OWL.]
+
+THE OWL.
+
+
+ We know not alway
+ Who are kings by day,
+ But the king of the night is the bold brown owl!
+
+I wonder why the folks put my picture last in the book. It can't be
+because they don't like me, for I'm sure I never bother them. I don't
+eat the farmer's corn like the crow, and no one ever saw me quarrel with
+other birds.
+
+Maybe it is because I can't sing. Well, there are lots of good people
+that can't sing, and so there are lots of good birds that can't sing.
+
+Did you ever see any other bird sit up as straight as I do? I couldn't
+sit up so straight if I hadn't such long, sharp claws to hold on with.
+
+My home is in the woods. Here we owls build our nests--most always in
+hollow trees.
+
+During the day I stay in the nest or sit on a limb. I don't like day
+time for the light hurts my eyes, but when it begins to grow dark then
+I like to stir around. All night long I am wide awake and fly about
+getting food for my little hungry ones. They sleep most of the day and
+it keeps me busy nearly all night to find them enough to eat.
+
+I just finished my night's work when the man came to take my picture. It
+was getting light and I told him to go to a large stump on the edge of
+the woods and I would sit for my picture. So here I am. Don't you think
+I look wise? How do you like my large eyes? If I could smile at you I
+would, but my face always looks sober. I have a great many cousins and
+if you really like my picture, I'll have some of them talk to you next
+month. I don't think any of them have such pretty feathers though. Just
+see if they have when they come.
+
+Well, I must fly back to my perch in the old elm tree. Good-bye.
+
+
+
+
+THE OWL.
+
+
+ In the hollow tree, in the old gray tower,
+ The spectral owl doth dwell;
+ Dull, hated, despised in the sunshine hour,
+ But at dusk he's abroad and well!
+ Not a bird of the forest e'er mates with him;
+ All mock him outright by day;
+ But at night, when the woods grow still and dim,
+ The boldest will shrink away!
+
+ O! when the night falls, and roosts the fowl,
+ Then, then, is the reign of the Horned Owl!
+
+ And the owl hath a bride, who is fond and bold,
+ And loveth the wood's deep gloom;
+ And, with eyes like the shine of the moonstone cold,
+ She awaiteth her ghastly groom.
+ Not a feather she moves, not a carol she sings,
+ As she waits in her tree so still,
+ But when her heart heareth his flapping wings,
+ She hoots out her welcome shrill!
+
+ O! when the moon shines, and dogs do howl,
+ Then, then, is the joy of the Horned Owl!
+
+ Mourn not for the owl, nor his gloomy plight!
+ The owl hath his share of good--
+ If a prisoner he be in the broad daylight,
+ He is lord in the dark greenwood!
+ Nor lonely the bird, nor his ghastly mate,
+ They are each unto each a pride;
+ Thrice fonder, perhaps, since a strange, dark fate
+ Hath rent them from all beside!
+
+ So, when the night falls, and dogs do howl,
+ Sing, Ho! for the reign of the Horned Owl!
+ We know not alway
+ Who are kings by day,
+ But the King of the Night is the bold Brown Owl!
+
+ BRYAN W. PROCTER
+ (Barry Cornwall.)
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ Racycle
+ NARROW TREAD
+
+ THE VERDICT IS IN
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ Please mention "BIRDS" when you write to advertisers.
+
+
+
+
+TESTIMONIALS.
+
+
+ FRANKFORT, KY., February 3, 1897.
+ W. J. BLACK, Vice-President,
+ Chicago, Ill.
+
+Dear Sir: I have a copy of your magazine entitled "Birds," and beg to
+say that I consider it one of the finest things on the subject that I
+have ever seen, and shall be pleased to recommend it to county and city
+superintendents of the state.
+
+ Very respectfully,
+ W. J. DAVIDSON,
+ State Superintendent Public Instruction.
+
+ * * *
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., January 27, 1897.
+ W. J. BLACK, ESQ.,
+ Chicago, Ill.
+
+Dear Sir: I am very much obliged for the copy of "Birds" that has just
+come to hand. It should be in the hands of every primary and grammar
+teacher. I send herewith copy of "List of San Francisco Teachers."
+
+ Very respectfully,
+ M. BABCOCK.
+
+ * * *
+
+ LINCOLN, NEB., February 9, 1897.
+ W. J. BLACK,
+ Chicago, Ill.
+
+Dear Sir: The first number of your magazine, "Birds," is upon my
+desk. I am highly pleased with it. It will prove a very serviceable
+publication--one that strikes out along the right lines. For the purpose
+intended, it has, in my opinion, no equal. It is clear, concise, and
+admirably illustrated.
+
+ Very respectfully,
+ W. R. JACKSON,
+ State Superintendent Public Instruction.
+
+ * * *
+
+ NORTH LIMA, OHIO, February 1, 1897.
+ MR. W. E. WATT,
+
+Dear Sir: Sample copy of "Birds" received. All of the family delighted
+with it. We wish it unbounded success. It will be an excellent
+supplement to "In Birdland" in the Ohio Teachers' Reading Circle, and I
+venture Ohio will be to the front with a good subscription list. I
+enclose list of teachers.
+
+ Very truly,
+ C. M. L. ALTDOERFFER,
+ Township Superintendent.
+
+ * * *
+
+ MILWAUKEE, January 30, 1897.
+ NATURE STUDY PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+ 227 Dearborn Street, Chicago.
+
+Gentlemen: I acknowledge with pleasure the receipt of your publication,
+"Birds," with accompanying circulars. I consider it the best on the
+subject in existence. I have submitted the circulars and publication to
+my teachers, who have nothing to say but praise in behalf of the
+monthly.
+
+ JULIUS TORNEY,
+ Principal 2nd Dist. Primary School, Milwaukee, Wis.
+
+
+
+
+OUR PREMIUM
+
+
+ A picture of wonderful beauty of the
+ Golden Pheasant almost life size in
+ a natural scene, plate 12x18 inches,
+ on card 19x25 inches, is given as a
+ premium to yearly subscribers. Our
+ price on this picture in Art Stores
+ is $3.50.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Birds Illustrated by Color Photograph
+[March 1897], by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIRDS ILLUSTRATED [MARCH 1897] ***
+
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